Highschool: Should I?

Hello all. Let me introduce myself, I'm a High School Student (Grade 11 to be exact). Now, straight to the point; I was thinking of dropping my Physics subject. I know, it's a shocker. But, the reason I am dropping it is because I am having a "bit" of a problem. To start off, our teacher is, let's say, cannot speak that well in English & he's kinda strict :uhh:. And I was wondering if I could "swap" the Physics course for Math (Academic), and have Math (Applied) in my first semester, so for my second I could have Math (Academic). I'm not so sure if I can still swap subjects but I think I can drop it. Here are some information about the Physics course:

It's only the second week of school and I'm having trouble with Physics. Not sure, why I'm not that good at math, probably genes :grumpy:. Anyway, last year I took Grade 10 Math (Academic) which had Algebra I & II, Trigonometry, etc. So yeah, furthermore, I noticed our teacher went straight to the work instead of reviewing some concepts? Like, he only gave us some Kinematics equations and then some problems to do. So, I can't really get help (because of family matter) or to be honest, I can't be forced to go for extra help :rofl:. I took this course because I was thinking of creating games that time , so I thought about Physics and how it could be used with Game Design/Programming. BUT I'm actually thinking of being Computer Programmer.

hmm you live in the GTA don't you ? lol. Because of the course code. Well to get into Computer Programming you need physics it is required for admission for University's so try to take it 2nd semester and get help on it so you can find physics much more easier.

It appears to me like you have a whole shoulder load of excuses that you're carrying around to explain to yourself why you shouldn't take this class (the teacher is strict, he doesn't speak English to the level you'd like, you have bad math genes, the teacher didn't review concepts that you would have liked review on, a family matter that keeps you from getting any advice from other teachers...).

With all that in your head, I suspect that you're secretly hoping that someone will come on here and tell you that it's okay to drop the course, that if you just want to be a programmer, you don't need physics. Then, in a few years when you stumble into a road block where it appears you actually did need physics, you can blame your circumstances on bad advice.

Or do I have it wrong?

The thing is at some point we all have courses we struggle with - material that challenges us, instructors that we don't get along with, or genes that keep us from looking like David Hasselhoff. On top of that, if you shy away from this challenge, chances are, you're going to run into another one that's quite similar sooner or later and you'll be back in the same place. One of the skills that you should learn in high school is how to handle challenges like this. I'm not going to tell you what decision to make, because in the end it's your life. You have to weigh the consequences and make the decision.

But I can tell you that if you don't learn how to rise to the challenge, you're going to learn about dealing with the consequences of shrinking away.

Haha, yes I do. Anyway, that's a good idea..
You mean like get a head start/get a tutor? Then in Semester 2, it would be more easier?

like not really a tutor ..just explore the world of physics...go on this site read intro to physics threads do independent research on the WWW. Also get pointers from actual physics teacher in your school.